Trayvon Martin shooting transforms part-time mayor

March 29, 2012|Barbara Liston | Reuters

SANFORD, Florida (Reuters) - Banker Jeff Triplett became the part-time mayor of Sanford, Florida, last year. He wanted to improve transportation and attract jobs to the quaint city of brick streets and lakefront views.

Now, he is confronted by any mayor's nightmare: the shooting death of a black teenager under vague circumstances, accusations that someone who volunteered to protect lives unjustifiably took one and questions about the police investigation.

The white mayor, who is a senior vice president at United Legacy Bank, is governing a town of about 54,000, 30 percent of whom are black and have long complained bitterly about police mistreatment.

"I ran for office to make a better Sanford. And this comes on your plate, and it's just amazing," 43-year-old Triplett told Reuters in an interview.

"The decisions I'm trying to make, I could be not only held accountable for them from the city side but from the nation and the world that's watching right now."

The death of Trayvon Martin has drawn international attention, spurred protests in American cities and prompted a federal review. Triplett has been booed off a stage, defended by black community leaders, and lectured on racial justice by civil rights activists.

A slender, fair man from southwest Missouri, the mayor was in Tampa, Florida, with his family for his 11-year-old son's football game on March 10 when Sanford City Manager Norton Bonaparte Jr. called to say a shooting that had occurred 13 days earlier in their town was in the news.

Media around the world told the story of how 17-year-old Martin had walked to a convenience store on the night of February 26 to buy candy and iced tea.

On his way to his father's girlfriend's home, Martin was spotted by a half-white, half-Hispanic watch captain patrolling the neighborhood. George Zimmerman called police to report a "suspicious" person. Before police arrived, 28-year-old Zimmerman had shot and killed Martin in an incident that remains unclear.

Sanford police questioned Zimmerman and set him free after he claimed self-defense.

Triplett said he and Bonaparte became "joined at the hip" at City Hall trying to ascertain the facts surrounding Martin's death and look into accusations about police conduct.

"My question immediately was the same as everybody else's," Triplett said. "How is there somebody that has been killed, and we can't make an arrest or we didn't make an arrest?"

Triplett had difficulty getting a handle on the case. Information would be relayed only to be corrected, he said, and police were generally reluctant to reveal too much about the investigation.

Pressure on the mayor's office mounted as people around the world signed petitions demanding Zimmerman's arrest. Triplett fielded calls from reporters and prepared for protest marches in Sanford.

He agreed to appear at a March 14 rally led by Baltimore evangelist Jamal Bryant. It proved a turning point for him.

"I walked in, and that's when it all really and truly hit me smack in the face. There were 500 people in there. There were people outside. There were news cameras and reporters from all over the nation," Triplett said.

The mayor, who typically spent 10 hours a week on his official duties before the shooting, went to his supervisors at the bank and said he would take a leave of absence to focus on the city.

By now, Martin's family was asking Triplett to release the audio of a call that Zimmerman made to police on the night of the shooting and 911 calls from neighbors who heard the confrontation. Police, prosecutors and the city attorney opposed releasing the calls because of the investigation, Triplett said.

"Everyone was saying to me, no, no, no, don't turn them over," he said. "I just continually asked, 'Why wouldn't we do this?'"

"I made that call to try to settle everything down a little bit, to let the family hear what transpired. We were being accused of a lot of things, or the police department was, so we can take the step to say, 'We're not here to hide anything.'"

On March 16, Triplett invited Martin's family to his office at City Hall to listen to the calls. Natalie Jackson, an Orlando civil rights lawyer, told Reuters that she was there with Martin's parents, Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton; his 21-year-old brother Jahvaris Fulton; two family representatives; and the city manager.

Triplett played the calls on his office computer. Someone was heard crying for help. Martin's mother wept and ran from the room, convinced it was her son, Jackson said. Everyone was moved to tears.

"It was very emotional," Triplett recalled. "Obviously when you hear something like that, there couldn't be anything worse for a family member or a parent ... and to hear your own son, what transpired at the last second."